The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 7, 1934, Page 2

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PAGE TWO Published Daily Except Sunday By THE CITIZEN PUBLISHING ©0., INO. L. P. ARTMAN, President. ¥rom The Citizen Buil corner Greene and Amn Streets Unly Daily Newspaper in Key West and Monroe County. Entered at Key West, Florida, as second class matter VIFTY-FIFTH YEAR “Member of the Asseciated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for republication of all news dispatches credited to {t or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published here, SUBSCRIPTION RATES vnie Year .. six Months Three Monti One Month Weekly ..... ADVERTISING RATES ‘ade known on application, SPECIAL NOTICE All reading notices, cards of thanks, resolutions o! <, obituary not i ot Sin petcbeegel 00 as the rate of 10 cnt s a line. Notices for entertainments by churches from which & revenue is to be derived are & cents a line. The Citizen is an open forum and invites discus- sion of public issues and subjects of local or general interest but it will not publish anonymous communi- cations. NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES FROST, LANDIS & KOHN 250 Park Ave. New York; 35 East Wacker Drive, CHICAGO; General Motors Bldg., DETROIT; Walton Bidg., ATLANTA. ll THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | witnout fear and without favor; never be afraid to attack wrong or to applaud right; aiways fight for progress; never be the or- gan.or the mouthpiece of any person, clique, faction or class; always do its utmost for the pablie welfare; never tolerate corruption or inj- stien; denounce vice and praise virtue; commend good done by individual or organ- ization; tolerant of others’ rights, views and opinions; print only news that will elevate and not contaminate the reader; never com- promise with principie, . WILL always seck the truth and print it —— THE UNEMPLOYED a 1s i 1 In a painstaking summary of employ- ment, completed at the close of April, the | National Industrial Conference Board re- | ports a gain of 5,182,000 from March 1933 i to March 1934. The number idle had been H reduced from 13,203,000 a year ago to 8,-| 021,000 last month. Agriculture, age and all the industries were covered, in- cluding public, professional, private and | personal service. There was also an al- | lowance of 1,045,000 new workers since | the 1930 census was taken. It is a reassuring gain to have got! more than 5,000,000 people back to work. ! But it is a challenging problem to have 8,- | 000,000 still jobless. If it is granted that | we have a couple of million out of work | i even in prosperous years, there still remain | six millions who want work, need work, | and must have work not only to supply their own needs but to keep our economic system going. We cannot permanently | support anywhere near 8,000,000 and ex- | pect to have a prosperous or contented | nation. The jobless ones decay in their | forced idleness, spread discontent and drag others ‘down with them. This is a challenge to all believers in laissez-faire—those who still want to let ; nature take its course and trust in casual, | unrelated, individual effort to preserve | our industry and social order. How can 8,000,000 workless men and women be let ! alone? In this age it takes planning—a “planned society” if you will—to get that | vast army back to work and keep it at work, \ HITLER’S MAY DAY The May Day celebration in Ger- many—there was only one for the wholc nation—seems to have been an endurance MONDAY, MAY 7, 1934, The Lite of Our Lord cooriin The Hitherto Unpublished Manuscript ute Secret 85 Years Significance of Empty Sepulchre Is- Stressed in Description of Scene in Which the Two Marys Find Stone Taken Away. f£4itor’s Note.—The inconsistencies in punctuation and spelling | which appeared in the original manuscript, intended by Dickens only Jor the eves of his children and not for the printer, have been followed in the vresent publication. : CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH, Part Two. QWHEN that morning began to dawn, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary, and some other women, came to the Sepulchre, with some more spices which they had pre- pared. As they were saying to each other, “How shall we roll away the stone?” the earth trembled and shook, and an angel, descending from Heaven, rolled it back, and then sat resting on it. His countenance was like lightning, and his garments were white as snow; and at sight of him, the men of the guard fainted away with fear, as if they were dead, Mary Magdalene saw the stone rolled away, and wait- ing to see no more, ran to Peter and John who were com- ing towards the place, and said “They have taken away the Lord and we know not where they have laid him!” They immediately ran to the Tomb, but John, being the faster of the two, outran the other, and got there first. He stooped down, ‘and looked in, and saw the linen clothes in which the body had been wrapped, lying there; but he did not go in. When Peter came up, he went in, and saw the linen clothes lying in one place, and a napkin that had been bound about the head, in another. John also went in, then, and saw the same things. Then they went home, to tell the rest. e * * = BUT Mary Magdalene remained outside the sepulchre, weeping. After a little time, she stooped down, and looked in, and saw Two angels, clothed in white, sitting where the body of Christ had lain. These said to her, “Woman, why weepest Thou?” She answered, “Because they have taken away my Lord, and I know ‘not where they have laid him.” As she gaye this answer, she turned around, and saw Jesus standing behind her, but did not then know Him. Thou? what seekest thou?” “Woman,” said He, “Why weepest She, supposing Him to be the gardener, replied, “Sir! If thou hast borne my Lord IMPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST “The Angel at the Tomb,” by Axel Ender, a reproduction from the print which hangs in the ADVOCATED BY THE CITIZEN Library. Lenox Collection of the New York Public the village, they asked this stranger to stay with them, which he consented to do. When they all three sat down to supper, he took some bread, and blessed it, and broke it, as Christ had done at the Last Supper. Looking on him in wonder, they found that his face was chan; before them, and that it was Christ himself; and as they looked on him, he disappeared. | hence, tell me where thou hast laid him, and I will take him away.” Jesus pronounced her name “Mary!” Then she knew him, and starting, exclaimed “Master !”-—“Touch me not,” said Christ; “for I am not yet ascended to my father; but go to my disciples, and say unto them I ascend unto my Father, and your Father; and to my God, and to your God!” Accordingly, Mary Magdalene went and told the Disci- ples that she had seen Christ, and what He had said to test as much as anything. It is reported that 2,000,000 workers stood for hours in the blistering sun of Tempelhof Airdrome near Berlin waiting to hear Chancellor Adolf Hitler make his 50-minute address. Throughout the country, at the same time. 40,000,000 other workers stood, in large Spiritaal Values Bridges to complete Road to Main Jana. Freé Port. Hotels and Apartments Bathing Pavilion. Aquarium. a Airports—Land and Sea. i Consolidation of County and City ‘Governments. ' ‘Teachers, not the ~~ MMeachers, not the buildings make the school. Women should make up their minds as well as their faces. She’s, only a poor printer's. daughter, but he likes her type. * What no tax for building air castles? A hint for the next legislature. Things will be all right when we get taxes revised so the other fellow pays Horosenpe : Friendly stars, dominate Bob he ‘a fore breakfast. “ioe Shieds QL If reduction of big business salaries is madness, there's method in it. That is one way to drive big men into public service. They call the assistant secretary of agriculture a “dictator.” Anybody who can dictate to farmers almost deserves to get away with it. Insull need not fear that he will not get justice in the courts of the United States, but the stockholders of his former utilities are afraid he won't. The pictures of Charles Dickens that! not clear. And to tell the truth, The Citizen prints are disillusioning; it’s impossible to believe anybody so hand- some as that could have amounted to any- thing, said a Key West woman. Advertising men have stated that those merchants who do not advertise pay for the advertisements of those that do. The reason given is that merchants who advertise take away business from those who do not and in that way the latter pay. Obversely, those-merchants who advertise at the same time also advertise the mer- chandise of those who do not, even if vicariously, and by inference and sugges- tion, *pulsory labor service policy which, he said, yon which wou feel sheerfalbe- | and small groups, in their various com- munities, listening to their leader’s voice as it was brought to them on.a vast system of loudspeakers. The crowds everywhere applauded his words. The words themselves were milder than were Hitler's earlier speeches or the statements in his book. He cheered the workers by telling them again his govern- ment was keeping the elimination of em- ployment as its first “gigantic task.” He -asserted that “the German people want no | war because they do not need additional territory; they became great on a_ small area because of their special talents and | industry,” and they can do it again. Another statement concerned the com- “is intended to take the conceit out of peo- ple and make all feel themselves members of one commonwealth. To be a critic is no essential calling.” Critics, apparently, are conceited peo- ple, and certainly there is no place for them in Hitler’s scheme of government. pid Sea's, ., NOT QUR FIGHT. It was supposed that rebellion ceased in Nicaragua when the American marines pulled out last year and Sandino, veteran rebel, made his peace with the native gov- ernment at Managua. Sandino was killed later in a private feud. But his cause lives on. Americans were surprised to read the other day of the ambush of a group of Sandinistas, the killing of eight of their number and the capture of rifles and am- | munition. Many houses and plantations have been destroyed by marauders, or by owners in fear of marauders. | What they are fighting about now is | Po ple are not much interested. Our action to the news is merely a sense satisfaction that our own boys are not do- of jdo vol jis iDAYS GONE | her; and with them she found ‘the other women whom she had left at the sepulchre when she had gone to call those two disciples, Peter and John. These women told her and the rest, that they had seen at the Tomb, two men in shining garments, at sight of whom they had been afraid, and had bent down, but who had told them that the Lord was risen; and also that as they came to tell this, they. had seen Christ, on the way, and had held him by the feet and worshipped Him. But these accounts seemed to the apostles at that time as idle tales, and they did not be- lieve them. The soldiers of the guard too, when they recovered from their fainting-fit, and went to the chief Priests to tell them what they had seen, were silenced with large sums of money, and were told by them to say that the disciples had stolen the Body away while they were asleep. * 8 # BUT it happened that on that same day, Simon and Cleopas—Simon one of the twelve apostles, and Cleo- pas one of the followers of Christ were walking to a village called Emmaus, at some little distance from Jerusalem, and were talking, by the way, upon the death and resur- rection of Christ, when they were joined by a stranger, who explained the Scriptures to them, and told them a great deal about God, so that they wondered at his knowl- edge. As the ip was fast coming on when they reached ~ KEY WEST IN which gives them the chance capital. Happenings Here Jest 10 Year| “<Age Todlly As Taken From The Files Of The Citizen What is the best way to Charles Lunn. former police of- ficer of Key West but who has been employed by the Florida East Coast Railway compary in the yards ~ and her insight into the logy of the boy makes an interest-} ing human interest story. There is a decided demand i « Key West now for small rent-pay completely severed whe under which he was ¥ ‘stop | EY instantly rose up, and returned to Jerusalem, and and a finding the disciples sitting together, told them what : they had seen. While they were speaking, Jesus stood in the midst of alF the company, and said “Peace be unto ye!” Seeing that they were greatly frightened, he showed them his hands and feet; and invited them to touch Him; and, to encourage them and give them time to recover themselves, he ate a piece of broiled fish and a piece of honeycomb before them all. Practical Religion are fundamental in But Thomas, one of the Twelve Apostles, was not there, at that time; and when the rest said to him afterwards, “We have seen the Lord!” he answered “ The Life I shall see in his hands the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe!” At that eee though the doors were all shut, Jesus again a) among them, and said “Peace be unto you!” Then he sa to Thomas, “Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side; and be not faithless, but believing.” Thomas answered, and said to Him, “My Lord and my God!” Then said Jesus, “Thomas, because thou hast seen me, ' thou hast believed. Blessed are they that have not seen me, and yet have believed.” (Concluded tomorrow.) (Coperight for North and South Americe, 19 rights’ res: pressed a desire to go to the cele- devices to give pleasure bration, and this is an opportunity young in in_spirit and to; i quickly Tio ii operation aety after BY, enjoy a vacation in the Cuban, it was announced they could be jused. the were i-———:: _ Editorial. comment: smali boys from destroying trees,’ the business man who saa a plants and shrubbery is the ques-. because the tentacles of the trusts annoyance. tion that has for some time kept'are crushing the life out of Key Westers guessing. Mrs. Allan, business, would be in less danger B. Cleare has solved the problem} if he would advertise a little more psycho. | frequently. his frank Bentley an-! of a son in their) yme in Miami Tuesday morning. Mr. and Mrs, ounce the birt struck by « te Dr. Lowe's remaining 7 amputated just bel litics ¢ wn ters now the other part era, toe candidates OU. De | publishing ‘ re- | when ing the fighting, and that our government jbe nearer 4 is not assuming the responsibility. April 18, in which Chancellor Chamber lain’s budget review was printed. A sig- nificant paragraph and one to make any !17 jplar ns te A one red-blooded American's blood boil is this: !"evnce¢ pars psa “There were LOUD CHEERS for his an-!The reduced rate © nouncement that he was again making no account of the provision for the payment of the War Debt jaarete ce Da to America.” will tak = ing houses, particularly those; »| which are built on good sized lots. | So far as can be learned there are ready bayers for this type of prop. | erty whenever the price is reason- , able, Residents have been heard " to remark they would be willing to, give a good price to be able to look inte the future of Key West. } However, as another remarked, this cannot be done so the best 4, thing is to take advantage of pres. , ent epportunities and make the , extends an invitation to mothers; bright. A special sermon will be preach- ed Sanday morning, May 12, we of Mother's Day, by ¥ H. Rice. pastor the > First Baptist chureh. Mr. Rice fatare . and to the public generaliyrte be Probably the largest crowd of children that has ever been in Rayview Park was there yester- day when the playthings were . y ready for use. Various sorts of swings, the ocean wave and other! The Lighthouse Tender Ivy is at’ | sand Key where repairs are being jmade to the lighthouse at that) [point. The Ivy will return to Key/ } West Saturday and go back to Sand Key early Monday morning ‘to resume operations i Today In iiistory eecccscesecesac-sessence 1755 — Columbia University (then King’s College), organized }from the proceeds of a lottery. 1910—Gedrge V. proclaimed King of Great Britain and Ire-' iand. 191 4-—White House wedding of © the |vesident’s daughter, Eleanor R. ¥/loem to the Secretary of “he Tre +y, William G. McAdoo. Tei i—Steamship Lusitania tor-| | peciort off Irish const by German! submarine with tom of nearly’ 1200 lives. Our ts 4s The music of the Eng- lish Bible remains in the story as told by And United Feature Syndicate, Ine; PROTESTS AGAINST DOGS , : Subseribe to The Citizen, ALHAMBRA, Calif.— Because; BENJAMIN LOPEZ his neighbor's dog barks almost|i FUNERAL HOME ‘continuously, sometimes emitting! an average of 12, howls a minute,| Sometimes’ 0. ¥, Motre of this city, has asked! complains the court to “ ‘erack down” on the; ue Phone 135 CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF OF KEY WEST as at the close of business March 6, 1934, Comptrelier’s Call RESOURCES Loans and Investments & 245,911.83 Overdrafts _.... 833.54 Banking House, Farnitare and Fixtures ....... Conds of States and Pos- sessions of the United States ne Municipal, Public Utility, Railroad and Other Bonds and Securities Demand Loans, Stock Ex- change Collateral Stock Federal United States 1995: % 36.55 ment Securities . Cash and due from Banke 903,587.68 1438, 497.51 Wy Fia,23813 LIABILITIES Capital _ Serpies and Undivided Protite Cireulation — Deposits 22,995.25 $144,370.68 846,661.20 90,442.00 ‘Fu7i8.23813 MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEN MEMBER OF THE TEMPORARY INSURANCE FUND OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION U. 3. GOVERNMENT DEPOSITARY

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